Founder and Editor-in-Chief

Richard Creasey is a
founder of The Digital Village. His first spell-checker offered
the correction "Crazy" whenever it got to his name. He's tried to live up
to it ever since.

For example, Richard conceived the Ford
London to New York Overland Challenge and made himself team leader of
the expedition, which set out from London on December 27th 1993 via the
Siberian Deepfreeze, and arrived, triumphant, at the United Nations headquarters
in New York on April 5th 1994. During that time he had two desk jobs: Director
of Special Projects at Central Independent Television and Director of Network
Factual Programmes at Meridian Broadcasting.

Previously Richard was Central/ATVs longest serving programme controller.
For 14 years he ran the Network Factual department and was responsible for
all aspects of the company's features and documentary output. This encompassed
nearly 400 programmes a year, ranging from dramas such as Ken Loach's Game
Keeper and Stephen Frear's Walter, the award winning Viewpoint
documentary series, major co-productions like the Vietnam: A Television
History, as well as Central's public service, educational and religious
programming.

In 1989 Richard founded the East West Creative
Association (EWCA), the first creative, multiple media joint venture between
Russia and the UK. EWCA organised Richard's record breaking drive across
Russia, production managed feature films like Jackie Chan's First Strike,
and major television drama like Sean Bean's Sharpe and the forthcoming Hornblower
series for ITV. EWCA also negotiated exclusive theatrical distribution rights for Colombia
Tristar , Disney and UIP across Russia.

In 1984 Richard co-founded the Television Trust for the Environment (TVE)
which was set up by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the World Wide
Fund for Nature (WWF) and Central Television in the UK. TVE's goal is to
raise environmental awareness worldwide. He is also a Trustee of the Wildscreen
World, and has been a UK council member of WWF, and a member of two advisory
committees of the Arts Council.